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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 February 2009
Article VII of the Augsburg Confession of 1530 contains a definition of the Church the substance of which was adopted by most of the Protestant Confessions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, including the Articles of the Church of England and the Confessions of the Free Churches: ‘The Church is the congregation of the saints, in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments rightly administered. And for the true unity of the Church it is sufficient to agree about the teaching of the Gospel and the administration of the Sacraments, nor is it necessary to have everywhere like human traditions, whether rites or ceremonies instituted by man.’
page 22 note 1 Documents of the Church, 295, ed. by Bettcnson, .Google Scholar
page 22 note 2 Newbigin, , The Household of God, 50.Google Scholar
page 23 note 1 The Nature of the Church, 61, ed. by Flew, .Google Scholar
page 23 note 2 ibid., 59.
page 25 note 1 Newbigin, , The Household of God, 54, 56.Google Scholar
page 26 note 1 Henderson, G. D., The Church and Ministry, 76.Google Scholar
page 26 note 2 Quoted in Rupp, G., The Righteousness of God, 317.Google Scholar
page 26 note 3 Lee Woolf, , Reformation Writings, Vol. I, 87.Google Scholar
page 27 note 1 The Nature of the Church, 83.
page 27 note 2 R.W., 318.
page 28 note 1 The Misunderstanding of the Church, 83.
page 29 note 1 Holman, , On the Council and the Churches, Ed. V, 271.Google Scholar
page 29 note 2 See Henderson, G. D., The Church and Ministry, 40.Google Scholar
page 30 note 1 R.W., 363, 365.
page 31 note 1 R.W., 366.
page 32 note 1 Lindsay, T. M., History of the Reformation, Vol. 1, 201.Google Scholar
page 32 note 2 Harnack, A., The History of Dogma, Vol. VII, 183.Google Scholar
page 33 note 1 R.W., 113.
page 33 note 2 ibid., 116.
page 34 note 1 R.W., 367.
page 35 note 1 R.W., 223.
page 35 note 2 R.W., 224.
page 36 note 1 R.W., 366.